Realistic Thinking, Earth Spirit and Human Spirit, Michael Festival
HE aim of everything we have been considering during the last three
days, my dear friends, has been to point the way in which the human
being can once more be converted, as it were, from an earth citizen to
a citizen of the cosmos, how the horizon of his life can be expanded
to the reaches of the universe, and how thereby his earthly life, too,
can be enriched, not only as regards such expansion, but in the
intensity of his inner impulses as well.
Yesterday I told you how a genuine spiritual approach can disclose the
true nature of the planets: that they are not the mere physical bodies
of which modern astronomy tells us, but rather that they can enter our
consciousness as manifestations of spiritual beings. In this
connection I spoke of the moon and of Saturn. It is not possible in
the allotted time to consider each separate planet, nor is it
necessary for our present purposes. My aim was merely to point out how
our whole frame of mind can be expanded from the earth to cosmic
space. But only in this way does it become possible to feel the outer
world as part of ourself, in the same way as we do all that takes
place inside our skin — our breathing, circulation, and so forth.
Present-day natural science considers our earth merely a dead mineral
body. In our civilization it never occurs to a man who is studying
some aspect of cosmology, for example, that there is no element of
reality in what he has in mind. The present frame of mind is
astonishingly obtuse in the matter of a feeling for reality. People
cheerfully call a saline crystal real, and also a rose,
without in any way differentiating these realities from each other.
Yet a saline crystal is a self-contained reality bounded within
itself, while a rose is not. A rose can have no existence other than
in connection with the rosebush. A rose — I refer to the flower
— cannot come into being of itself. So if we imagine the flower
of a rose at all — even if it fills us with delight to see this
conception realized — we have an abstraction, for all that we can
touch it: we have not the reality represented by the rosebush. Nor is
there any true reality in that earth of primitive rock, slate,
limestone, etc., described by modern external science for there is no
such earth as that: it is purely fictitious. Has not the earth
produced substantial plants, animals, human beings? That is all part
of the earth, just as much as is the crystalline slate of mountain
ranges; and if I only consider an earth consisting of stone I have no
earth at all. Nothing that external natural science deals with today
in any branch of geology is a reality.
So what we should do in this our last lecture is to proceed not only
logically but realistically. The obvious errors in the general
knowledge of today are not very formidable obstacles because they can
readily be refuted. The worst evil in present-day knowledge and
cognition is what appears to be absolutely irrefutable. You see, the
calculation of everything in the modern science of geology that
pertains, for instance, to the origin of the earth, so and so many
million years ago, calls for mental brilliance and exact knowledge.
True, these calculations disagree by a trifle: some call it twenty
million years, others two hundred million; but people of today take
such figures in their stride — in other fields as well. {In the
matter of post-war inflation, for example, the situation reached a
point in 1923 at which 2 billion Marks had the value of 1 pre-war
Mark.} In spite of all this, however, the method employed for such
computations really calls for the greatest respect. It is exact, it is
accurate — but in what way? It is comparable to the following
procedure: I examine a human heart today, and then again in a month.
By some sort of more sensitive examination I discover changes in this
human heart, so I know how it has altered in the course of a month.
Then I observe it again after the lapse of another month, and so
forth; that is, I apply the same method to the human heart that
geologists use to calculate geologic epochs by millions of years: they
compute the little changes by the variations of deposits in the
strata, and so forth, in order to arrive at the time lapses. But what
am I going to do with the conclusions arrived at concerning the
changes in the human heart? I can apply that method to these changes
and figure out how this human heart looked three hundred years ago and
how it will look in another three hundred years. The calculation may
be quite correct, only this heart was not in existence three hundred
years ago, nor will it be three hundred years hence. — Similarly,
the most brilliant and exact methods of computation tempt the present
science of geology into setting forth how the earth looked three
million years ago, when there was no trace of Silurian or other
strata. Again, the figures can be perfectly correct, but the earth was
not in existence. The physicists today calculate the changes that will
occur in various substances in twenty million years. In this direction
American scientists have done some extraordinarily interesting
research and have told us, for instance, how albumen is going to look
then — only the earth will no longer be in existence as a
physical cosmic body.
Logical methods, then — exactitude — these really constitute
the greatest danger, because they are incapable of refutation. Given
the correct method, a statement of what the heart looked like three
hundred years ago, or how the earth appeared two hundred million years
ago, cannot be disproved, nor would it be of any avail to occupy
oneself with such refutations: what we need is a realistic way of
thinking, a realistic way of looking at the world.
The indispensable factor in every domain of spiritual science is just
such a universal grasp of reality; and by means of such methods as I
have described — inner, intimate methods that lead to an
acquaintance with the population of the moon and that of Saturn —
one learns as well, not only the relation of the earth to its own
beings, but the relation of every being of the universe to the being
of the cosmos. Everywhere in the world matter contains spirit, for
matter is, of course, only the expression of spirit. At every point
imagination, inspiration, and intuition find the spirit in the
sensible, in the physical — not as enclosed in sharp contours,
but as incessant mobility, as perpetual life. And just as there is no
reality in the stone formations offered us by geology — for it is
a matter of seeking the earth, including its production of plants,
animals and physical men — so, if it is to be grasped in its
all-embracing entirety, the earth must be understood as the outer,
physical configuration of spirit.
Through imagination we learn first how the spirit principle of the
earth differs from that of the human being, if I may so express it. In
confronting someone, I perceive many different expressions of his
being: I notice how he walks, I hear how he speaks, I see his
physiognomy and the gestures of his hands and arms; but all this
impels me to seek a homogeneous psycho-spiritual principle dominating
him. And just as here one instinctively searches for a unified
psycho-spiritual principle in the self-enclosed human being, so
imaginative cognition, in contemplating the earth, finds not an
undivided earth-spirit principle, but a multiplicity of manifold
variety. It is therefore wrong to infer by analogy, for example, a
homogeneous spirit principle in the earth from the spirit principle of
man; for true vision reveals a multiplicity of earth spirituality, of
spiritual beings, as it were, that dwell in the kingdoms of nature.
But these spiritual beings are passing through a life: they are in a
process of becoming.
Now let us see what this imagination perceives during the course of a
year in the way of earth activity when it is supplemented by
inspiration, and we will direct our soul's gaze first to the winter.
Outwardly, frost and snow cover the ground, and the germs of the earth
beings, of the plants, so to speak, are received back into the earth.
All that is connected with the earth as germination — we can here
ignore the world of animals and men — is withdrawn by the earth
into itself. In addition to the familiar burgeoning life of spring and
summer, winter shows us dying life. But what does this dying life of
winter mean in a spiritual sense? It means that those spiritual beings
whom we call elemental spiritual beings — beings that constitute
the life-giving principle proper, especially in plants — withdraw
into the earth itself and become intimately connected with it. Such is
the imaginative aspect of the earth in winter: it takes into its body,
as it were, its spiritual elemental beings and shelters them there. In
winter the earth is at its most spiritual; that is, it is most fully
permeated by its elemental spirit beings.
Like all super-sensible observation, all this passes over into
feeling, into sensibility, in him who envisions it. As he feelingly
observes the earth in winter and sees the snow on the ground, he knows
that this makes a covering for the earth's body so that within it the
elemental spirit-beings of earth life themselves may dwell. With the
coming of spring the relation of these beings to the earth is
transformed into a relation to the cosmic environment. Everything in
these beings that during the winter had produced a close relationship
with the earth itself becomes related to the cosmic environment in
spring: the elemental beings seek to escape out of the earth; and
spring really consists of the earth's sacrificial devotion to the
universe in letting its elemental beings flow out into it. In winter
these elemental beings need repose in the bosom of the earth; in
spring they need to stream up through the air, through the atmosphere
— to be determined by the spiritual forces of the planetary
system, namely, of Mercury, Mars, Jupiter, and so on. Nothing that can
act upon the earth spirits from the planetary system does so in
winter: this commences in the spring. And here we can observe a more
spiritual cosmic process, and compare it with a corresponding but more
material one in the human being: our breathing process. We inhale the
outer air, hold it in our own body, then exhale it again.
In-breathing, out-breathing — that is one component of human
life.
Now, in the winter the earth has inhaled its whole spirituality, and
with the commencement of spring it starts to exhale it again into the
cosmos. In the very old periods of human evolution, when there still
existed a sort of instinctive clairvoyance, men felt this; and
therefore they felt it to be in conformity with earth existence to
celebrate the Christmas Festival during the winter solstice. Then the
earth was at its most spiritual — that was the time when it could
hold the mystery of the Christmas Festival. The Redeemer could unite only
with an earth that had drawn all its spirituality into itself. But for
the festival intended to induce a feeling in man that he belongs not
only to the earth but to the whole universe, that as an earth citizen
his soul can be awakened through cosmic agencies, for this festival
of resurrection only that season could serve which carries all the
spirituality of the earth out into the cosmos. That is why we find the
Christmas Festival linked with phenomena pertaining to the earth, with
the dark of winter, with a sort of earth sleep, while on the other
hand we see the Easter Festival so fitted into the course of the
seasons that we determine it not by earthly but by cosmic events: the
first Sunday after the first full moon of spring. It was the stars
that in former times had to tell men when Easter should be celebrated
— the time when the whole earth opens itself to the cosmos. One
resorted to the cosmic script: man had to become aware that he is an
earth being, and that at the Spring Festival of Easter he has to open
himself to cosmic reaches.
It positively hurts to hear people discussing such glorious thoughts
of a bygone age as they have been doing now for twenty or twenty-five
years: well-meaning people who do not want the Easter Festival to be
so movable. At the very least, they say, it should be held on the
first Sunday in April; they want it all quite external and abstract. I
have had to listen to arguments pointing out that it creates confusion
in commercial ledgers to have Easter so movable, and that business
could be carried on in a much more regular way if the date of Easter
were strictly assigned. It is really distressing to see how
world-alien our civilization has become — this civilization that
fancies itself practical. A suggestion such as the one just mentioned
is as unpractical as can be, because our civilization can establish
something that may be practical for a day, but never for a century. In
order to be practical for a century, the matter in question must be in
harmony with the universe. But herein the cycle of the seasons must
ever be able to point man to his inner life in conjunction with the
entire cosmos.
Advancing from spring toward summer, the earth more and more loses its
inner spirituality. This spirituality, these elemental beings, pass
from the terrestrial to the extra-terrestrial realm and come wholly
under the influence of the cosmic planetary world; and in a former
epoch this was celebrated in the great and profound rites performed in
certain Mysteries at the height of summer, the season in which we have
instituted the Festival of St. John. This was the time when the
initiates of yore, the Mystery priests of those sanctuaries where the
St. John Festival was celebrated in its original significance, were
deeply permeated with the contemplation: That which in the winter
time, during the winter solstice, I had to seek by gazing into the
interior of the earth through the blanket of snow that became
transparent for me, that I will now find by directing my vision
outward; and the elemental beings that during the winter were
determined by what pertains to the inner earth, these are now
determined by the planets. From the beings which in winter I had to
seek in the earth I gather, at the height of summer, knowledge of
their experiences with the planets. — And just as we experience
our respiratory process unconsciously, simply as something inwardly a
part of our existence, so man once experienced his existence as part
of the course of the seasons in the spirituality that pertains to the
earth. In winter he sought his kindred elemental nature-beings in the
depths of the earth, in midsummer he sought them high in the clouds.
In the earth he found them inwardly permeated and saturated with their
own earth forces coupled with what the moon forces have left behind in
the earth; and in the summertime he found them given over to the vast
universe.
And when summer begins to wane after the St. John season, the earth
starts inbreathing its spirituality again; and once more the time
approaches for the earth to harbor its spirituality within.
We are nowadays little inclined to observe this in-and out-breathing
of the earth. Human respiration is more a physical process; the
breathing of the earth is a spiritual process — the passing out
of the elemental earth-beings into cosmic space and their re-immersion
in the earth. Yet it is a fact that just as we participate, in the
tenor of our inner life, in what goes on in our circulation, so, as
true human beings, we take part in the cycle of the seasons. As the
blood circulation inside us is essential for our existence, the
circulation of the elemental beings between earth and the heavens is
indispensable for us as well; and only the bluntness of their
sensibility prevents men today from glimpsing the factors within
themselves that are conditioned by this external course of the year.
{See: Rudolf Steiner,
Calendar of the Soul,
Anthroposophic
Press, New York.} But the very necessity which in the course of time
will compel men to learn to receive the ideas of spiritual science, of
super-sensible cognition — the necessity to develop the inner
activity indispensable for a full realization of what
spiritual-scientific revelations entrust them with — this in
itself will sharpen and refine their capacity for sentient
receptivity.
This, my dear Friends, is what you really should await as a result of
deep absorption in that super-sensible cognition aimed at by
anthroposophy. You see, if you read a book or a lecture cycle on
anthroposophy just as you read any other book — that is, as
abstractly as you read other books — there is no point whatever
in reading anthroposophic literature at all. In that case I should
advise reading cookery books or technical books on mechanics: that
would be more useful; or read about How to Become a Good Business
Man. Reading books or listening to lectures on anthroposophy has
sense only when you realize that to receive its messages a frame of
mind is called for totally different from the one involved in the
gleaning of other information. This is confirmed even by the fact that
those who today fancy themselves particularly clever consider
anthroposophic literature quite mad. Well, they must have a reason for
this view, and it is this: Everybody else describes things quite
differently, presents the world in an entirely different way; and we
cannot stand these anthroposophists who come along and change it all
around.
And indeed, the conclusions reached by anthroposophy and appearing in
the world today are very different from what emanates from the other
quarters; and I must say that a certain policy adhered to by some of
our friends, namely, that of making anthroposophy generally palatable
by minimizing the discrepancies between it and the trivial opinions of
others — such efforts cannot be approved at all, though they are
frequently met with. What is needed is a totally different attitude, a
different orientation of the soul, if the message of anthroposophy is
to be considered plausible, comprehensible, understandable,
intelligent — instead of mad.
But given this different orientation, not only the human intellect but
the human Gemüt will in a short time undergo a schooling
that will render it more sensitive to impressions: it will no longer
feel winter merely as the time for donning a heavy coat, or summer as
the signal for shedding various articles of clothing; but rather, it
will learn to feel the subtle transitions occurring in the course of
the year, from the cold snow of winter to the sultry midsummer of
earth life. We shall learn to sense the course of the year as we do the
expressions of a living, soul-endowed being. Indeed, the proper study
of anthroposophy can bring us to the point at which we feel the
manifestations of the seasons as we do the assent or dissent in the
soul of a friend. Just as in the words of a friend and in the whole
attitude of his soul we can perceive the warm heartbeat of a
soul-endowed being whose manner of speaking to us is quite different
from that of a lifeless thing, so nature, hitherto mute, will begin to
speak to us as though out of her soul. In the cycle of the seasons we
shall learn to feel soul, soul in the process of becoming; we will
learn to listen to what the year as the great living being has to tell
us, instead of occupying ourself only with the little living beings;
and we shall find our place in the whole soul-endowed cosmos.
But then, when summer passes into autumn, and winter approaches,
something very special will speak to us out of nature. One who has
gradually acquired the sensitive feeling for nature just described
— and anthroposophists will notice in due time that this can
indeed be brought about in the soul, in the Gemüt, through
anthroposophical endeavor — such a one will learn to distinguish
between nature-consciousness, engendered during the spring and summer,
and self-consciousness proper which thrives in the fall and winter.
What is nature consciousness? When spring comes, the earth develops
its sprouting, blossoming life; and if I react to this in the right
way, if I let all that the spring really embraces speak within me
— I need not be conscious of it: it speaks to the unconscious
depths of a consummate human life as well — if I achieve all this
I do not merely say, the flower is blooming, the plant is germinating, but
I feel a true concord with nature and can say, my ego blooms in the
flower, my ego germinates in the plant. Nature-consciousness is
engendered only by learning to take part in all that develops in the
burgeoning and unfolding life of nature. To be able to germinate with
the plant, to blossom with the plant, to bear fruit with the plant,
that is what is meant by passing out of one's own inner
self and by becoming one with outer nature. Truly,
the term to develop spirituality does not mean to become
abstract: it means to be able to follow the spirit in its being and
expansion. And if, by participating in the germinating, the flowering,
and the bearing fruit, man develops this delicate feeling for nature
during the spring and summertime, he prepares himself to live in
devotion to the universe, to the firmament, precisely at the height of
summer. Every little firefly will be for him a mysterious revelation
of the cosmos; every breath in the atmosphere in midsummer will
proclaim the cosmic principle within the terrestrial.
But then — if we have learned to feel with nature, to blossom
with the flowers, to germinate with the seeds, to take part in the
bearing of fruit — then, because we have learned to dwell in
nature with our own being, we cannot help co-experiencing the essence
of the fall and winter as well. He who has learned to live with nature
in the spring learns also to die with nature in the autumn. Thus we
attain again by a different way to those sensations that once so
intensely permeated the soul of the Mithras priest, as I have
described. He sensed the course of the seasons in his own body. That
is no longer possible for present-day mankind; but what will become
more and more incumbent upon humanity in the near future — and
herein anthroposophists must be the pioneers — is to experience
the cycle of the seasons: to learn to live with the spring and to die
with the autumn.
But man must not die: he must not let himself be overpowered. He
can live united with burgeoning, blossoming nature, and in doing so he
can develop his nature-consciousness; but when he experiences the dying
in nature the experience is a challenge to oppose this dying with the
creative forces of his own inner being. Then the spirit-soul principle,
his true self-consciousness, will come to life within him; and by sharing
in nature's dying during the fall and winter he will become in the highest
degree the awakener of his own self-consciousness. In this way the human
being evolves: he transforms himself in the course of the seasons by
experiencing this alternation of nature-consciousness and self-consciousness.
When he takes part in nature's dying, that is the time when his inner
life force must awake; when nature draws her elemental beings into
herself the inner human force must become the awakening of self-consciousness.
Michael forces! Now we feel them again. In the old days of instinctive
clairvoyance the picture of Michael's combat with the Dragon arose
from quite different premises. Now, however, if we vividly comprehend
the idea embraced in nature-consciousness — self-consciousness:
spring-summer — autumn-winter, the end of September will once
more reveal to us the same force that points us to the victorious
power which should evolve on this grave if we take part in the dying of
nature: the victorious power that fans the true, strong
self-consciousness of man into bright flame. Here we have again
Michael vanquishing the Dragon.
It is indispensable that anthroposophical knowledge, anthroposophical
cognition, should stream into the human Gemüt as a force.
And the way leads from the dry and abstract, although exact
conceptions of today to that goal where the living enlightenment taken
into our Gemüt once more confronts us with something as
full of life as was in olden times the glorious picture of Michael in
battle with the Dragon. This infuses into our cosmogony something very
different from abstract concepts; and furthermore, do not imagine that
such experience is without consequences for the totality of man's life
on earth!
I have frequently set forth in our meetings here in Vienna how we can
enter and feel at home in the consciousness of immortality, in the
awareness of prenatal existence. At this meeting I wanted particularly
to show you how we can gather into our Gemüt the spiritual
forces from the spiritual world, in the wholly concrete sense. It is
truly not enough to talk in a general, pantheistic, or other vague way
about spirit underlying all matter. That would be just as abstract as
it would to be satisfied with the truism: Man is endowed with spirit.
What possible meaning could that have? The term spirit takes on
meaning only when it speaks to us in concrete details, when it keeps
revealing itself to us concretely, when it can bring us comfort,
uplift, joy. The pantheistic spirit in philosophical
speculations means nothing whatever. Only the living spirit, that
speaks to us in nature in the same way as the human soul in man speaks
to us, can enter the human Gemüt in a vitalizing and
exalting way. But when this does occur our Gemüt will
derive powers from the enlightenment transformed in it, precisely
those powers that are needed in our social life. During the last
three or four centuries mankind has simply acquired the habit of considering
all nature, and human existence as well, in intellectual, abstract
conceptions; and now that humanity is confronted with the great
problems of social chaos, people try to solve these, too, with the
same intellectual means. But never in the world will anything but
chimeras be brought forth in this way. A consummate human heart is a
prerequisite to the right to an opinion in the social realm; but this
no man can possess without finding his relation with the cosmos, and
in particular, with the spiritual substance of the cosmos.
When the human Gemüt will have received into itself
spirit-consciousness — the spirit-consciousness engendered by the
transition from nature-consciousness (spring-summer) to
self-consciousness (autumn-winter) — then will dawn the solution,
among others, of the social problems of the moment. Not the
intellectual substance of such problems as the social question, but
the forces they need, depend in a deep sense upon the contingency of a
sufficient number of men being able to make such spiritual impulses
their own.
All this must be brought to our Gemüt if we would consider
adding the autumn festival, the Michael Festival, to the three we
have: the festivals of Christmas, Easter and St. John, that have
become mere shadows. How wonderful it would be if this Michael
Festival could be celebrated at the end of September with the whole
power of the human heart! But never must it be celebrated by making
certain arrangements that bring about nothing but abstract
Gemüt sensations: a Michael Festival calls for human
beings who feel in their souls in fullest measure everything that can
activate spirit-consciousness.
What does Easter represent in the year's festivals? It is a festival
of resurrection. It commemorates the Resurrection realized in the
Mystery of Golgotha through the descent of Christ, the Sun-Spirit,
into a human body. First death, then resurrection: that is the outer
aspect of the Mystery of Golgotha. One who understands the Mystery of
Golgotha in this sense sees death and resurrection in this way of
redemption; and perhaps he will feel in his soul that he must unite in
his Gemüt with Christ, the victor over death, in order to
find resurrection in death. But Christianity does not end with the
traditions associated with the Mystery of Golgotha: it must advance.
The human Gemüt turns inward and deepens more and more as
time goes on; and in addition to this festival that brings alive the
Death and Resurrection of Christ, man needs that other one which
reveals the course of the year as having its counterpart within him,
so that he can find in the round of the seasons first of all the
resurrection of the soul — in fact, the necessity for achieving
this resurrection — in order that the soul may then pass through
the portal of death in a worthy way. Easter: death, then
resurrection; Michaelmas: resurrection of the soul, then death.
This makes of the Michael Festival a reversed Easter
Festival. Easter commemorates for us the Resurrection of Christ from
death; but in the Michael Festival we must feel with all the intensity
of our soul: In order not to sleep in a half-dead state that will dim
my self-consciousness between death and a new birth, but rather, to be
able to pass through the portal of death in full alertness, I must
rouse my soul through my inner forces before I die. First,
resurrection of the soul — then death, so that in death that
resurrection can be achieved which man celebrates within himself.
I trust these lectures have contributed a little toward bridging the
gap between the purely mental enlightenment anthroposophy has to
offer, and what this anthroposophy can mean to the human
Gemüt. That would make me very happy; and I should be able
to look back affectionately on all that we have been privileged to
discuss in these lectures, which were truly not addressed to your mind
but to your Gemüt, and through which, in a manner not
customary nowadays, I wanted to point out, among other things, the
social stimulus so sorely needed by mankind today. Humanity will
become attuned to such social impulses only by an inner deepening of
the Gemüt. That is what fills my soul, now that I must
bring these lectures to a close. It was from an inner need of my heart
that I delivered them to you, my dear Austrian friends.
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